Borgman v. Bultema

182 N.W. 91, 213 Mich. 684, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 613
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1921
DocketDocket No. 73
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 182 N.W. 91 (Borgman v. Bultema) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borgman v. Bultema, 182 N.W. 91, 213 Mich. 684, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 613 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Clark, J.

The opinion of the trial judge is sustained by the record and by the law. It is well written. To dispose of this case we shall quote from it at length:

“Both the plaintiffs and the defendants claim to be members of a religious denomination known as the Christian Reformed Church. This religious denomination has been organized in this country since the year 1857. The First Christian Reformed Church of Muskegon is a branch or local church of this religious denomination, and is incorporated under the provisions of Act No. 118 of the Public Acts of the State of Michigan of 1901.
“The defendant, Harry Bultema, for a number of years last past, has been the regular and duly constituted minister of said First Church of Muskegon. The other defendants, excepting the four who have filed a disclaimer, claim to be the elders and deacons of said First Church, which elders and deacons under the church law constitutes the local governing body of the church, known as the consistory.
“Some of the plaintiffs are members of said First Church, others claim to be the duly constituted and legal consistory of said church, and others join as plaintiffs as the representatives of the classis, which, [687]*687under the church law, is claimed to be the governing body of the church next over the consistory.
Church Order or the Christian Reformed Church. Article 1. For the maintenance of good order in the Church of Christ it is necessary that there should he: offices, assemblies, supervision of doctrine, sacraments and ceremonies, and Christian discipline, of which matters the following articles treat in due order. Article 2. Of the Offices. The offices of four kinds: of the ministers.of the word, of the doctors, of the elders, and of the deacons. Article 3. No one, though he be a doctor, elder or deacon, shall be permitted to enter upon the ministry of the word and the sacraments without having been lawfully called thereunto. And when anyone acts contrary thereto, and after being frequently admonished does not desist, the classis shall judge whether he is to be declared a schismatic or is to be punished in some other way.
[687]*687“Under the church law of this denomination the office bearers of the local church are the elders and deacons elected by the local congregation, and together called the consistory, and the minister. The governing body of the church next over the consistory is known as the classis, which is made up of delegates sent from the local churches in a certain neighborhood or territory. The supreme governing body of the church is known as the synod, which body is made up by delegates sent from the several classes. The classis is supposed to hold a meeting three times a year, while the synod meets every two years.
“It is the claim of the plaintiffs that the defendants have been duly and legally removed from their offices of minister, deacons and elders of said First Church in accordance with the established law and usages of the Christian Reformed Church, and that consequently they have no further right to control the property of said First Church or to exercise the privileges and functions of their respective offices.
“The defendants insist that they have never been legally deposed from their respective offices, and consequently they have the legal right, as the local governing body of said First Church, and as its minister, to control the property of said church, to oon[688]*688duct public worship therein, and to perform the duties of their respective offices.
Article 4. The lawful calling of those who have not been previously in office, consists: First, in the election which, after preceding prayers, shall take place by the consistory and the deacons with due observance of the regulation established by the consistory for this purpose, and of the ecclesiastical ordinance, that only those can for the ¡first time be called to the ministry of the word who have been declared eligible by the churches, according to the rule in this matter; and furthermore with the advice of classis or of the counselor appointed for this purpose by the classis.
[688]*688“The First Christian Reformed Church of Muskegon are the owners of the church property, where the regular services of those affiliated with said church are held and conducted, and also of the house or manse where the minister of said church lives. The legal description of said real estate is admitted to be correctly set forth in the bill of complaint, and said real estate is worth in the neighborhood of thirty thousand dollars ($30,000).
“This bill is filed to restrain the defendants from acting, or claiming to act, as the minister and consistory of said First Church, and from holding, managing and controlling the said real estate as such minister and consistory, or from performing the duties of their respective offices, on the theory that they have been duly and legally removed from their respective offices, and consequently have no lawful right to further act in that respect.
“As I view the case the result of this controversy turns on the question of whether or not defendants have been properly deposed from their offices in accordance with the laws and usages of said Christian Reformed Church, and whether or not the defendants, by their acts and doings since this controversy arose, have in legal effect removed themselves from this religious denomination and consequently now have no legal right to claim to be acting as the [689]*689minister and officers of a local church belonging to the denomination.
Secondly, in the examination both of doctrine and life which shall be conducted by the classis, to which the call must be submitted for approval, and which shall take place in the presence of three deputies of synod, from the nearest classis. Thirdly, in the approbation by the members of the calling church, when, the name of the minister having been announced for two successive Sundays, no lawful objection arises; which approbation, however, is not required in case the election takes place with the co-operation of the congregation by choosing out of a nomination previously made.
“If either of these questions shall be answered in the affirmative the plaintiffs are clearly entitled to the relief prayed for.
“The property belonging to the First Church of Muskegon has been donated by various parties believing in and affiliated with this religious denomination, and has been solemnly dedicated to the use of this religious denomination.
“Under well-established rules of law, acquiesced in by all our courts, and which, as I understand it, no one disputes, where property is dedicated to the use of a religious denomination it cannot thereafter be diverted to the use of those who depart from that faith, but must remain for the use and benefit of those who still adhere to the faith.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 N.W. 91, 213 Mich. 684, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borgman-v-bultema-mich-1921.